Still Dealing with Pelvic Pain? Stress Could Be to Blame
Yes, stress can heavily impact your pelvic floor.
If you are experiencing pelvic pain characterized by a tight, overactive or spastic pelvic floor, you’ll want to seriously consider how much stress you endure.
To put it simply, stress influences our autonomic nervous system (which sends adrenaline and cortisol stress hormones throughout the body). When that system goes into overdrive and we enter “fight or flight” —whether it is due to financial stress, health stress, relational stress—we tip into that autonomic nervous system and become stressed.
This system, in turn, governs our pelvic floor, and will turn on and up-regulate the pelvic floor muscles when stressed.
Unlike other skeletal muscles, pelvic floor muscles are influenced by your autonomic nervous system, drawing a true brain-muscle connection between stress’ influence on pelvic floor dysfunctions.
Therefore, pelvic pain should be evaluated on on the brain level, too! See how powerful of an influence our mind can be?
We want to encourage you to get evaluated by one of our outstanding physical therapists, and regain control of your life. Pelvic pain, pelvic floor dysfunction, back pain, tailbone pain—you name it—these conditions do not have to control your life. There is hope. Call us today to book an appointment for 1 of our 3 Southern California locations, or inquire about a virtual, online treatment session.
Learn More
Sarton Physical Therapy and its affiliates recommend that you contact your physician before participating in any physical therapy, exercise or fitness related programs. Learn More.
YouTube
Social
Read More
- About Us 17
- Athletes 8
- Bladder Health 22
- Diagnoses 57
- Education 49
- Endometriosis 12
- Exercises 9
- Global Patient Program 9
- Interstitial Cystitis 19
- Intro to Pelvic Floor PT 33
- Men's Health 32
- My First Visit 4
- Online Treatment 2
- Pain Science 9
- Pain With Sex 25
- Pelvic Education Alliance 4
- Pelvic Floor Friends 1
- Pelvic Pain 45
- Pelvic Pain Superheroes 10
- Posture 3
- Pregnancy 13
- Pudendal Neuralgia 20
- Stretching 8
- Support 32
- Surgery 16
- Testimonials 35
- Treatments 46
- Vulvodynia 2
- Vulvodynia/Vestibulodynia 14
- Women's Health 55